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25 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Jackson helped to bring an early end to the Bank of the United States by
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b) beginning to deposit government funds in state banks rather than in the Bank of the United States.
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Jackson's action in regard to the Indians was to
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b) refuse to enforce a Supreme Court decision in the Indians' favor.
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John C. Calhoun's theory of nullification provided
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c) that states had the right to "nullify" specific pieces of federal legislation
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In the Jacksonian era, free blacks in the North
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d) experienced pervasive discrimination and segregation
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In the early nineteenth century,
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c) many states dropped property requirements for voting
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The two main rivals in the Jackson adminstration were
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d) Martin Van Buren and John C. Calhoun
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The immediate issue that spurred the Webster-Hayne debate was the
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c) sale of western lands
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To keep the government financially sound after the panic of 1837, Van Buren proposed
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c) an independent treasury
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The Whig party developed in opposition to
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b) Jacksonian Democrats
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In dealing with internal improvements, Andrew Jackson
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c) supported federal funds only for interstate programs
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In the Webster-Hayne debate, Webster managed to subtly drive a wedge between the South and the West in Congress
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True
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Martin Van Buren was known as the "Little Magician" and the "Red Fox"
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True
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Daniel Webster said, "Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable."
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True
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Resistance to the Indian Removal Act came largely from northern tribes.
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False
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The first third party in American presidental politics was the Anti-Masonic party.
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True
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In Worchester v. Georgia, the supreme court ruled the Georgia law did not apply to the Cherokee nation.
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True
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Depositing federal funds in "pet banks" helped to stop the mania of speculation in the nation in 1836 and 1837.
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False
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The "Eaton malaria" united Van Buren and Calhoun.
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False
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In 1840, William Henry Harrison campaigned as a strong supporter of internal improvement and a national bank.
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False
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To defend nullification, Calhoun resigned as vice president.
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True
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In Worchester v. Georgia, the supreme court ruled the Georgia law did not apply to the Cherokee nation.
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True
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Depositing federal funds in "pet banks" helped to stop the mania of speculation in the nation in 1836 and 1837.
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False
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The "Eaton malaria" united Van Buren and Calhoun.
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False
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In 1840, William Henry Harrison campaigned as a strong supporter of internal improvement and a national bank.
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False
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To defend nullification, Calhoun resigned as vice president.
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True
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